Guglielmo Marconi is usually credited with sending the first radio message. Marconi was in Bologna, Italy. He came to England in 1896 and obtained a British patent for his wireless telegraphy system. In 1897 he established a radio transmitter on the roof of the Post Office at St. Martins-le-Grand in London, and sent a message a distance of a few hundred yards.
He continued to improve his apparatus, and in 1898 radio was installed aboard a ship at sea, the East Goodwin lightship off the south-east coast of England. In the following year wireless messages we sent across the English channel.
The first radio transmission across the Atlantic was on December 12, 1901 from a station on the cliffs at Poldhu. In Cornwall, and the message, three dots representing the letter S in the Morse code, was picked up at St. John’s in Newfoundland.
The existence of radio waves was first demonstrated by Heinrich Hertz, a German professor, in 1887. Marconi based his experiments on Hertz research.
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